Yungblud, the 22-year-old British singer romantically linked with Halsey, gave a new interview to Attitude describing his disinterest in following more traditional norms concerning gender and sexuality.

While he told the magazine that he's "more straight," he added that if "I walked down the street and met a (expletive) bloke tomorrow, or a trans person, you never know. It's about connection. I'm very fluid about it."

He continued: "I wake up one day and want to look girly as (expletive), and I'll wake up the next and walk out of the house in a Fred Perry polo shirt looking like I'll beat the (expletive) of out you. I'll be Anita from ‘West Side Story’ then suddenly transform into Liam Gallagher."

The singer – whose real name is Dominic Richard Harrison – released his debut album, "21st Century Liability," last summer, and is currently playing festivals across Europe before embarking on a solo world tour this fall.

He told Attitude that he first moved to London from his South Yorkshire hometown "to be liberated, to be able to paint my nails, to (expletive) try sex with a guy, to try everything, to fulfill my fantasies and figure out who I am. Ultimately, it was a massive journey to being comfortable in myself."

"I (still) have to get talked off the ledge 10 times a day, but I know who I am now," he added.

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Sam Smith identifies as nonbinary and genderqueer, the artist announced in March on Jameela Jamil's "I Weigh Interviews" series, saying: "I am not male or female. I think I float somewhere in between." The Grammy award-winning singer recently started using the pronouns "they" and "them," and said they came out as gay when they were ten years old. Grant Pollard, Grant Pollard/Invision/AP

After playing the first character to come out on a Disney Channel show, Joshua Rush came out as bisexual on Twitter in August. "first to respond to this tweet is bi lol," the "Andi Mack" star wrote before replying, "first! i win! it's me. i'm bi." In the thread, Rush recalled experiencing "internalized homophobia" despite playing an openly gay character on TV. Rich Fury, Getty Images

"America's Got Talent" judge Julianne Hough said she recently opened up to her husband about her sexuality. “I (told him), ‘You know I’m not straight, right?’ And he was like, ‘I’m sorry, what?’ I was like, ‘I’m not. But I choose to be with you,’ ” she told Women's Health for their annual "Naked Strength."
“I think there’s a safety with my husband now that I’m unpacking all of this, and there’s no fear of voicing things that I’ve been afraid to admit or that I’ve had shame or guilt about because of what I’ve been told or how I was raised,” she added. Getty Images

Cara Delevingne first publicly addressed her sexuality in a 2015 interview with Vogue, where she came out as bisexual. The model has been openly dating "Pretty Little Liars" actress Ashley Benson since 2018 and shared a romantic Instagram of the two kissing in June, during Pride month. Dimitrios Kambouris, WireImage

While "Pretty Little Liars" actress Ashley Benson has never publicly addressed her sexuality, she and Delevingne made their relationship official with their steamy #Pride Instagram post. The two also have been spotted wearing necklaces of each other's first initials. Michael Loccisano, Getty Images,

Bella Thorne, who came out as bisexual on Twitter in 2016, said she's recently realized her sexuality doesn't fit that label. During a sitdown with "Good Morning America" that aired on July 22, 2019, the actress said she is pansexual. "You like beings," she said of her sexuality. "You like what you like. Doesn't have to be a girl or a guy or a he or she or they or this or that. It's literally you like personality. You just like a being." Scroll on to see LGBTQ celebrities. Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP

"Grey's Anatomy" actor Jake Borelli followed his character, Dr. Levi Schmitt, out of the closet on Nov. 1, 2018, after he was involved in the long-running medical drama's first gay male romance. "This is exactly the kind of story I craved as a young gay kid growing up in Ohio, and it blows my mind that I'm able to bring life to Dr. Levi Schmitt as he begins to grapple with his own sexuality this season on Grey’s Anatomy," he wrote on Instagram. Mitch Haaseth/ABC

DeGeneres has been married to actress and model Portia de Rossi since 2008. The Australian-born actress, 45, came out publicly in 2005 after meeting DeGeneres at an awards show. LISA O'CONNOR, AFP/Getty Images

Actress Tessa Thompson got candid about her sexuality in a an interview with Net-A-Porter published in June 2018, in which she said she is "attracted to men and also to women." VALERIE MACON, AFP/Getty Images

Once part of the Hollywood super couple "Brangelina," Angelina Jolie has described herself as bisexual. The star dated actress Jenny Shimizu in the 1990s after they met on the set of "Foxfire." TRISTAN FEWINGS, Getty Images

"The Big Bang Theory" star Jim Parsons came out as gay in a 2012 New York Times profile. Parsons married his partner of 15 years last May at the Rainbow Room in New York. BRYAN BEDDER, Getty Images for Vulture Festival

Singer Lance Bass of NSYNC fame first came out in a 2006 interview with People Magazine. At a Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony for the band in 2018, Bass told the crowd, "Growing up in Mississippi and in a Southern Baptist church, in a town where everyone knows your business, I had a secret. I was gay. At the time, I thought I’d never be able to tell anyone." MICHAEL KOVAC, Getty Images for Environmental Media Association

Former Disney star and singer Miley Cyrus has been very open in the past few years about being pansexual and gender-fluid. "I am literally open to every single thing that is consenting and doesn't involve an animal and everyone is of age. Everything that's legal, I'm down with. Yo, I'm down with any adult -- anyone over the age of 18 who is down to love me," Cyrus said in a 2015 interview with ‘Paper.’ "I don't relate to being boy or girl, and I don't have to have my partner relate to boy or girl." ANGELA WEISS, AFP/Getty Images

While he's famous for having played a womanizer on "How I Met Your Mother," Neil Patrick Harris is very much a family man. Married to his partner, David Burtka, since 2014, Harris is the father of twins. ANGELA WEISS, AFP/Getty Images

Singer and rapper Janelle Monae came out in 2018 in a Rolling Stones cover feature. While she identified as bisexual, she said she associated with aspects of pansexuality too. Monae revealed the original title of her 2013 single,"Q.U.E.E.N." was originally "Q.U.E.E.R." JEAN-BAPTISTE LACROIX, AFP/Getty Images

“I was a tomboy growing up, and I remember my mom asking me when I was 10, 'Are you attracted to boys or girls?' I said I don’t know. Now I consider myself bisexual,” Alia Shawkat, best known for her role as Maeby on "Arrested Development," told "Out Magazine." “I think balancing my male and female energies has been a big part of me growing as an actor.” LISA O'CONNOR, AFP/Getty Images

Known for keeping her privacy, Jodie Foster's coming out speech at the 2013 Golden Globes was a low key affair. "I already did my coming out about a thousand years ago, back in the stone age," Foster said. "If you had been a public figure from the time that you were a toddler, if you had to fight for a life that felt real and honest and normal against all odds, then maybe then you too might value privacy above all else." TARA ZIEMBA, AFP/Getty Images

"The fact is, I'm gay, always have been, always will be," journalist Anderson Cooper wrote in 2012. "And I couldn't be any more happy, comfortable with myself, and proud." EVAN AGOSTINI, Invision via AP

Actor Rupert Everett has said that coming out affected his career. "But there were three or four big films, when I was successful, that the director and the other actors wanted me to be in and that I was absolutely blocked from by a studio, just for the fact of being gay," the actor said in a 2018 interview with Metro. GIUSEPPE LAMI, EPA-EFE

“I’m very fluid, and I think love is love," singer Demi Lovato said in a 2018 interview with InStyle. "You can find it in any gender.I like the freedom of being able to flirt with whoever I want." GIUSEPPE LAMI, EPA-EFE

Actress Raven Simone came out on "Oprah" in 2014, revealing she was in a relationship with a woman. "I don't want to be labeled gay, I want to be a human who loves humans," she said. DAVID LIVINGSTON, Getty Images

Tig Notaro married wife Stephanie Allynne in 2015. When they first met, Allynne identified as straight, but soon developed feelings for Notaro. “I had not dated women before, and I think when we first started spending time with each other, I was so into Tig and… I didn't know how to identify it because I thought I was straight,” Allynne said in an interview with Cosmopolitan.com. “I kept gravitating toward her and wanting to spend time with her, and then in the process of recognizing that in myself, I was like, ‘Oh my god, I am fully in love with this person.’” RACHEL MURRAY, Getty Images for Netflix

The comedian Wanda Sykes came out in 2008 at a rally to strike down California's anti-gay marriage bill, Proposition 8. "I kind of shocked myself," the comedian told CNN host Piers Morgan in 2011. "I was in the middle of it, and it was from anger." Vivien Killilea, Getty Images for GLAAD

Musician Melissa Etheridge came out in 1993 at the Triangle Ball in support of President Bill Clinton. She married Linda Wallem in 2014 after the Supreme Court struck down California's Proposition 8. DON ARNOLD, WireImage

In 2014, Laverne Cox became the first openly transgender person to be nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for acting. When asked by Time Magazine about how things have changed for the trans community since she was a kid, she said: “There’s a way to connect through the Internet that I didn’t have. So you can connect with people who are like you, who may be in another part of the country… I think there are more media representations that young trans people can look to and say, that’s me, in an affirming way. There’s just so many resources out there now that it makes you feel like you’re less alone.” DIMITRIOS KAMBOURIS, Getty Images

Rosie O’Donnell began publicly discussing her sexuality in 2002 when she sat down for an interview with ABC News."Part of the reason why I've never said that I was gay until now was because I didn't want that adjective assigned to my name for all of eternity. You know, gay Rosie O'Donnell." CINDY ORD, Getty Images for Showtime

Sean Hayes, famous for portraying the openly-gay Jack McFarland on "Will & Grace" in the late 90s and early 00s, didn't come out himself until 2010. "I didn’t want the responsibility, I didn’t know how to handle the responsibility of speaking for the gay community," Hayes said in a 2013 interview with the LA Times. "I always felt like I owed them a huge apology for coming out too late... It was all very scary. We got death threats. It was a really rough time for me, but I was also having the time of my life.” Dan MacMedan, USA TODAY

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June is Pride Month and we're taking a look at all the exciting ways cities around the globe plan to celebrate the LGBTQ community this year. 24/7 Tempo reviewed the largest, longest running and most impactful Pride events around the world. FG Trade / Getty Images

WorldPride, New York City (June 1-30): It's only fitting that the world's biggest LGBTQ pride event would return to New York to mark the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall riots, the June 1969 protest that gave birth to the gay-rights movement. WorldPride 2019 will include rallies, concerts, lectures, and exhibits will take place all month throughout the city. The WorldPride Welcome Center (112 Christopher Street in Manhattan’s West Village) will be open for the month of June. It's located just a few steps from the Stonewall Inn itself, which is still open today. barcex / Flickr

Zurich Pride Festival, Switzerland (June 14 -15): This Pride actually lasts two weeks, from June 1 to 16th, culminating in Switzerland's largest city's Pride Festival, a weekend of concerts, vendors, dance parties, and a parade. This year's theme is Strength in Diversity. Courtesy of www.zuerich.com

Sao Paulo Pride Parade, Brazil (June 23): The first Sao Paulo Pride Parade took place in 1997 when 2,000 LGBTQ activists gathered to celebrate their culture and protest against discrimination. The event has since become the largest Pride Parade in the world, with 5 million attendants in 2017. Victor Moriyama / Getty Images

NYC Pride ( June 26 - 30): New York's inaugural Pride March took place in 1970, a year after the Stonewall Riots, and has grown to see over 2 million attendees every year. This year's grand marshals include members of the Gay Liberation Front, an activist organization that formed in the wake of the Stonewall riots. They'll join Monica Helms, a navy veteran and transgender activist, and representatives of the Trevor Project, which aims to prevent suicide among LGBTQ youth. Kena Betancur / Getty Images

San Francisco Pride Parade (June 29): San Francisco's first gay rights march to City Hall took place in 1970, followed by a "gay-in" at Golden Gate Park. The first Pride Parade took place two years later, and in 1976, a group of female motorcyclists gathered at the head of the parade. Now, the Dykes on Bikes are a mainstay of this huge parade and celebration, which sees over 1 million attendees yearly. Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Mexico City Pride Parade (June 29): One of the largest pride events in Latin America, Mexico City's Pride Parade is entering its 41st year. Mexico City is continuously at the forefront of queer rights in the predominantly Catholic country. In 2010, the capital became the first Mexican city to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Pedro Mera / Getty Images

Madrid Orgullo, Spain (June 28 - July 7): The Spanish capital's Pride Parade is second only to Sao Paolo's, attracting 3.5 million attendees in 2017. People from all over Europe flock to Spain, one of the most gay-friendly countries in the world. A week of parties and cultural events precede the parade on July 7. Gonzalo Arroyo Moreno / Getty Images

Cologne Pride Parade, Germany ( July 5-7): Every year on the first weekend of July, Cologne holds a Christopher Street Day celebration, named for the New York neighborhood where the Pride movement began. The weekend features a street festival, political events, AIDS gala, and stage performances, culminating in a parade with over a million attendees and participants. Thorsten Hansen / Flickr

Canal Pride Festival, Amsterdam (July 27 - August 4): Pride in the Dutch capital is as amazing as you'd expect from the home of the Red Light District and the first country to legalize gay marriage. Milkshake Festival, an outdoor dance festival dedicated to inclusivity and acceptance, kicks off the opening weekend of Canal Pride. As the week continues, there are street parties, a Drag Queen Olympics, and a unique Pride Parade that floats down the city's canals. Jasper Juinen / Getty Images

Taiwan Pride (October 26): Asia's biggest LGBTQ event takes place in the first Asian country to legalize same-sex marriage. What started as a political rally is now a celebration that includes a parade and dozens of street parties. The action is focused around Taipei's Red District, home to over 20 gay bars and clubs hosting Pride events. Carrie Kellenberger / Flickr

Buenos Aires Pride Parade (November 2): In 1992, 300 people attended the first Pride Parade in Buenos Aires, many of them wearing masks to remain anonymous. Now, the parade has grown to 200,000 participants, who gather in early November to commemorate the founding of Argentina's first gay organization, Nuestra Mundo, in 1967. Courtesy of turismo.buenosaires.gob.ar